THE MICHIGAN DAILY Two Held For Conspiracy In Bremer Kidnap Case ~4 ' I I.NOR.-,. . -Assuciatd Pres P1 oiO John J. McLaughlin, Jr., (left), 17-year-old son of John J. "Boss" McLaughlin of Chicago, was held on ,charges of conspiracy to possess the Edward G. Bremer kidnap ransom money after his father confessed having $53,000 of the banker's $204,000 ransom to circulate. Philip Delaney, shown at right signing his finger- print record, was caught at McLaughlin's home and held on the same charge. Federal investigators said they found Delaney and young McLaughlin in possession of part of the ransom funds. Capt. Lord Will Leave R.O .C. For Washi noton Ilfantry Instructor Here For Past Six Years Will ie Assistant Exceutive (tQi. fRobert I. Lord, who has held he po1 ft general infantry instruc- wr of the University R.O.T.C. for the past six years, has been ordered to ke a new position of assistant to the executive officer of the Na- j[nal Board for the Promotion of ?ifle Pra ct ice, in Washington. Cap. Lord, in addition to Capt. C. A. Powell of the University R.O.T.C. whn has also been ordered to Wash- nctvn. will assume his new post au the middle of the summer. He L_ onlws t Lhe third member of the faculty here to be called to the Capitol within a year. Maj. Basil D. Edwards, who was formerly commander of the unit here. was transferred to a Wash- iiigton l)O--itiOfllast spring. Still an- other transfer is expected, according to Col. F. C. Rogers, incumbent corn- nander. Capt. Lord received his Army com- mission in August, 1917 following his giaduation from Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity. He first served with the 78th Division in New Jersey. Following his graduation from the infantry school at Fort Benning, Ga., he came to the University in July, 1928. Outside of a few temporary assignments outside of Ann Arbor, this has been his perma- nent station. Siia Rho Tai Willhold Last a. ]i'raiino Today Sigma Rho Tau, Stump Speakers' Society, will hold its last regular training meeting of the year at 7:30 p.m. today at the Union. At this meeting each circle will enroll speak- ers for the Associated Technical So- cieties' Contests which will be held May 9 and May 16. At 8:30 p.m. the regular business rmeeting will be held at which plans for the Tung Oil Banquet will be dis- cussed. This is the annual honors banquet which will be held by the society in the latter part of May. Robert Woodham, '34, president of the organization, has announced the program for the remainder of the se- mester. On May 9 the "Hall of Fame" contest is to be started in which each speaker makes a speech nominating some engineer for the A network of more than 1,000 tele- lines reach out to the faculty offices phones, including extension stations, and to all the departments on the forms a connecting link between all campus. the varied departments and func- The number of pnone calls com- tions of the University, according to pleted by this exchange amounts to, Francis C. Shiel, who is in general nearly half of the entire business charge of the University's telephone done by the Ann Arbor exchange, exchange system. which is in the neighborhood of 10,- This network is controlld by the 000 calls daily. The exchange is de- operation of two main switchboards,, signed to correlate the telephone fa- one in the West Engineering Build- cilities of the University into a work- ing and the other in the University able unit under which calls made to Hospital, and five subsidiary ex- and from the University depart- change boards located in the health ments, and intercommunicating calls service, the Museum, Mosher Jor- can be transmitted in 'the simplest dan Halls, the University business and most economical manner, ac- office, and Helen Newberry residence. cording to Mr. Shiel. -The West Engineering building ex- The University Hospital exchange change connects 459 main phones,, connects 150 main telephones and and 168 extensions. There are on 92 extensions. It also remains open the average 2,500 intercommunicat- 24 hours daily, and its operation has ing calls, and 2,200 outside calls pass- been particularly valuable in trans-; Leads Dillinger Hunt Alpha Nii W~ill HIold IPar~iuinraryDIriII Thyv ekly im eting of Alpha Nu of Kappa Phi Sigma, national speech society for men, at 7:30 p.m. today will be in the form of a parliamen- tary drill, the second that the organ- ization has held during the year. Charles Rogers, '34, will lead it. Announcement of the question to be debated in to annual Alpha Nui- Adelphi House of Representatives, meet was made yesterday. Alpha Nu will take the affirmative side of the question: "Resolved, That the Powers of the President of the United States As of July 1933 Should Be Made Permanent." Freshman members of Alpha Na met first-year members of the other organization earlier this year in a debate which Alpha Nu won. AFRAID TO MOVE DOG BERKELEY, Calif.. May 1. - Dr. --Associated Press Photo W. A. Rorer (above), Federal agent who captured the notorious George "Machine G6n" Kelly, led some of h relnf rc 'mcr 's rushed into northern Wisconsin to hunt John Dillinger. Largest Boat(I]Model In T1e World Will Be Disp>laiyed Here The largest steamship model ever constructed, which is said to be an accurate replica to the last detail of .he S. S. Kungsholn, Swedish-Amern- :an line boat, will be on display in the lobby of the East Engineering building for the next month. Valued at $10,000, the model is 10 feet in length, three feet wide, and seven and one-half feet high. It was on exhibition all last summer at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. The S. S. Kungsholn operated on the West Indies cruise during the winter months, and this summer will make a special trip to the North Cape, as well as running on a regular Atlantic schedule. The model was obtained for exhibi- tion purposes through the combined efforts of Frederick S. Randall of the Alumni Travel Bureau and Prof. John S. Worley of the engineering college. BRITISH FLIERS KILLED CRANWELL, England, May 1.- (AP) - Four Royal Airforce officers were killed today when two airplanes col- lided over the airdrome and smashed Senate Returns Modified Relief Bill To House Pass A Stricter Municipal Bankruptcy Measure By 45-28 Vote WASHINGTON, May 1. -) The Senate today passed and re- turned to the House a modified Mu- nicipal Bankruptcy Relief Bill au- thorizing more than 2,000 debt-rid- den cities and taxing units to petition the courts for approval of refinancing plans. The vote was 45 to 28. Senators Couzens and Vandenberg joined 10 other Republicans and 33 Democrats in supporting the bill, which was opposed by 14 Republicans and 14 Democrats. Stricter than the bill passed by the House in the special session, the measure approved was a substitute offered by Senator Patrick A. Mc- Carran, Nevada Democrat, embody- ing changes having the indorsement of the Administration. It would permit the cities to peti- tion the court for scaling down their debts if they could get holders of 51 per cent of their obligations to agree on a plan. Before the plan could become op- erative 66 2-3 per cent of the amounts in each class of obligation and 75 per cent of the aggregate claims would have to cc~rsent to it. Under the House bill the consent of holders of only 30 per cent of the outstanding debt is required to in- itiate a plan before the court assumes jurisdiction and the approval of only 66 2-3 per cent of holders of the ag- gregate amount of claims before the plan takes effect. New chapters in the Federal Trade Commission's record of how giant power interests have fought munici- pally operated plants were written today at the Commission's utilities investigation. In one hearing, Commission at- torneys bared documents purporting to show that private power compan- ies paid for the dissemination of biased information about plants owned by municipalities. In another they introduced letters which, they charged, showed that the Electric Bond & Share Co. of New York and a subsidiary, the Idaho Power Co., successfully opposed a mu- nicipal light plant at Buhl, Ido., part- ly by propaganda. TALKING BIRD DIES LONDON, May 1. - "Boy Brown," famous talking bird, died today. Boy Brown was able to recite the first 12 lines of Sing A Song of Sixpence and could repeat a dozen other nursery mitting the urgent calls coming in at Robert Cornish feared today that his all times of the day for hospital serv- experiment in which a dog was re- vice in the care of badly sick and in- stored to life afiter having been killed jured patients, Mr. Shiel said. The would be for naught if he is forced Hospital has a unique telephone pri- to move the semiconscious manimal vate service which is available in all from the University of California of the various wards. The individual campus. rooms are wired for a telephone con- Possibility that Cornish might have nection, and when the use of a phone to find other quartere for his experi- is required a portable instrument is ments developed as the dog showed brought in and attached to the wall signs of recovery. A move now ight plug, kill the animal, he said. Sigma Rho Tau "Hall of Fame." The to earth. All four were dead when rhymes. It was owned by a Kensing- winner's candidate is accepted for emergency squads reached the wreck- ton spinster. Boy Brown was a Bud- the "Hall." age. erigar --Australian grass parakeet. / 464